Na and K activity coefficients in bile and bile salts determined by glass electrodes

1964 ◽  
Vol 206 (5) ◽  
pp. 1111-1117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward W. Moore ◽  
John M. Dietschy

Mathematical formulations for transmembrane potential differences are expressed in terms of ionic activities rather than ionic concentrations, and require knowledge of the activity coefficients of a given ionic species in mixed solutions. Cation-selective glass electrodes have been used to determine sodium and potassium activity coefficients in pure bile salt solutions and in native bile, relative to standard NaCl or KCl solutions. Comparison was made with osmotic coefficients determined by freezing-point depression. Both sodium and potassium activity coefficients in bile salt solutions and in bile were lower than those for NaCl or KCl solutions at corresponding concentrations, with potassium coefficients being lower than those for sodium. These derived activity coefficients have been used experimentally in in vivo and in vitro gall bladder preparations with close agreement between observed potentials and those predicted by the Hodgkin-Katz equation.

1956 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 1069-1083 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. Rixon ◽  
J. A. F. Stevenson

The distribution of water and of sodium and potassium between the cell and synthetic environments has been studied in rat diaphragm muscle. It has been found that: (1) the amount of intracellular water is markedly increased at 0 °C. in oxygen and at 37 °C. in nitrogen compared to that of tissue at 37 °C. in oxygen, in media up to 0.75 osmolar; (2) optimal conditions of temperature and oxygen are necessary to prevent or reduce the uptake of water; (3) swelling at reduced temperatures and under hypoxic conditions is related to the oxygen uptake; (4) the loss of tissue solids during incubation does not have any significant effect on the calculation of the total tissue and intracellular water; (5) the concentration of total sodium and potassium in the tissue, in vivo and in vitro at optimal conditions is slightly in excess of that in the plasma water or incubating medium—this is believed not to represent an active hypertonicity; (6) concomitant with the uptake of water there are marked redistributions of sodium and potassium, the gain of sodium being greater than the loss of potassium. It is concluded that the swelling of tissue cells under conditions that inhibit oxidative metabolism is primarily due to the redistribution of electrolytes and that the natural distribution of water in muscle is determined by active maintenance of the concentration gradients of sodium and potassium across the cell membrane.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3526-3526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurence Panicot-Dubois ◽  
Christophe Dubois ◽  
Barbara C. Furie ◽  
Bruce Furie ◽  
Dominique Lombardo

Abstract Bile Salt Dependent Lipase (BSDL) is an enzyme secreted by pancreatic acinar cells. BSDL, in the presence of primary bile salts, participates in the hydrolysis of dietary lipid esters in the duodenum lumen. This 105 kDa N and O-glycosylated protein has been detected in the plasma of normal subjects. Recent in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that pancreatic BSDL reaches the blood via transcytosis through enterocytes. Other studies showed that pancreatic human BSDL is captured by human umbilical vein endothelial cells and induces the proliferation of smooth muscle cells in vitro at BSDL concentrations found in blood, suggesting that this enzyme may play a role in hemostasis and thrombosis. However the specific role of circulating BSDL is unknown. The goal of this study was to determine the possible involvement of circulating BSDL in thrombus formation. We investigated the participation of circulating mouse BSDL in thrombus formation using widefield intravital microscopy in the cremaster muscle of living mice. Thrombi were formed following laser injury of the vessel wall of an arteriole in the cremaster muscle. Pancreatic mouse BSDL, a 74 kDa glycoprotein, was detected using several antibodies directed against either the whole human BSDL (pAbL64, pAbL32) or a peptide based on a sequence in the N-terminal domain of BSDL (Ser326-Thr350; pAbAntipeptide). Mouse and human BSDL share about 80% sequence homology, the main difference localized in the C-terminal domain, which is truncated to the mouse BSDL compared with the human enzyme. All the antibodies are able to specifically recognize the mouse pancreatic BSDL. Using antibodies pAbL64, pAbL32, or pAbAntipeptide we observed specific accumulation of circulating mouse BSDL into the growing thrombus. The circulating BSDL co-localized with platelets present in the thrombus. These results suggest that circulating BSDL is involved in thrombus formation in vivo. In order to determine if BSDL plays a role in platelet activation and aggregation, we performed in vitro studies on human washed platelets. BSDL increased both the amount of phosphatidylserine exposure on the surface of platelets and the activation of αIIbβ3 induced by thrombin. These results indicate that this enzyme can amplify the activation of platelets in vitro. While BSDL alone cannot induce the aggregation of platelets, this enzyme significantly increases the amount of platelet aggregation induced by SFLLRN peptide or thrombin. Altogether, these data suggeste that circulating BSDL participates in the thrombus formation after laser injury of the arterial wall and can amplify both the activation of platelets and the phosphatidylserine exposure, increasing the thrombotic response after vessel injury. This mechanism may be operative in the development of venous thromboembolic disease in pancreatic cancer.


1969 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 397-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kalindi Deshmukh ◽  
Marcel E. Nimni

Collagen extracted from rat skin by neutral-salt solutions contains less aldehydes than the more insoluble collagen fractions. The concentration of aldehydes in collagen is directly related to its capacity to form stable cross-linked gels, which do not redissolve on cooling and become more insoluble in a variety of reagents. Whereas the absorption spectrum of neutral-salt-soluble collagen treated with N-methylbenzothiazolone hydrazone resembles that of acetaldehyde, the more insoluble collagen fractions show increasing amounts of a component that behaves like an αβ-unsaturated aldehyde. The ratio between α- and β-sub-units present in a particular fraction of soluble collagen seems to be constant and independent of the age of the animal. Neutral-salt-soluble collagen, which has a low concentration of β-components, will generate intramolecular bonds if gelled at 37°. These intramolecular bonds seem to precede the formation of stable intermolecular cross-links, since these gels can redissolve when cooled to yield a soluble collagen with a higher content of β-components of intramolecular origin.


1977 ◽  
Vol 64 (8) ◽  
pp. 572-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. R. Hardie ◽  
M. K. Green ◽  
W. Burnett ◽  
D. R. Walland ◽  
A. Hall-Brown

1995 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mans Minekus ◽  
Phillipe Marteau ◽  
Robert Havenaar ◽  
Jos H.J. Huis in't Veld

A multicompartmental in vitro model has been described, which simulates the dynamic events occurring within the lumen of the gastrointestinal tract of man and monogastric animals. The accuracy of the model for reproducing in vivo data on gastrointestinal transit, pH, bile salt concentrations and the absorption of glucose was tested. The in vivo conditions simulated in the model were based on studies in healthy human volunteers. Mathematical modelling of gastric and ileal delivery with power exponential equations was used for the computer control of meal transit. The model appeared to reproduce accurately the pre-set data on meal transit, pH and bile salt concentrations in the different gastrointestinal compartments. Glucose absorption from the small intestine was almost complete. This model reproduces very closely the dynamic conditions based on the in vivo situation in monogastric animals and man. Therefore, the model can be an important tool in studying the fate of ingested components (for example, food, microorganisms and medicines) during gastrointestinal transit and, consequently, may contribute to the replacement of studies using laboratory animals.


1977 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 828-831 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Furnival ◽  
W. Burnett ◽  
M. K. Green ◽  
N. C. Selvage ◽  
G. Cavaye ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shang-Hsin Wu ◽  
Mei-Hwei Chang ◽  
Ya-Hui Chen ◽  
Hui-Lin Wu ◽  
Huey-Huey Chua ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The bile salt export pump (BSEP) is a pivotal apical/canalicular bile salt transporter in hepatocytes that drives the bile flow. Defects in BSEP function and canalicular expression could lead to a spectrum of cholestatic liver diseases. One prominent manifestation of BSEP-associated cholestasis is the defective canalicular localization and cytoplasmic retention of BSEP. However, the etiology of impaired BSEP targeting to the canalicular membrane is not fully understood. Our goal was to discover what molecule could interact with BSEP and affect its post-Golgi sorting. Methods The human BSEP amino acids (a.a.) 491-630 was used as bait to screen a human fetal liver cDNA library through yeast two-hybrid system. We identified a BSEP-interacting candidate and showed the interaction and colocalization in the co-immunoprecipitation in hepatoma cell lines and histological staining in human liver samples. Temperature shift assays were used to study the post-Golgi trafficking of BSEP. We further determine the functional impacts of the BSEP-interacting candidate on BSEP in vitro. A hydrodynamically injected mouse model was established for in vivo characterizing the long-term impacts on BSEP. Results We identified that charged multivesicular body protein 5 (CHMP5), a molecule of the endosomal protein complex required for transport subcomplex-III (ESCRT-III), interacted and co-localized with BSEP in the subapical compartments (SACs) in developing human livers. Cholestatic BSEP mutations in the CHMP5-interaction region have defects in canalicular targeting and aberrant retention at the SACs. Post-Golgi delivery of BSEP and bile acid secretion were impaired in ESCRT-III perturbation or CHMP5-knockdown hepatic cellular and mouse models. This ESCRT-III-mediated BSEP sorting preceded Rab11A-regulated apical cycling of BSEP. Conclusions Our results showed the first example that ESCRT-III is essential for canalicular trafficking of apical membrane proteins, and provide new targets for therapeutic approaches in BSEP associated cholestasis.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ning Wang ◽  
Fang-yuan Mao ◽  
Wei-wei Huang ◽  
Hui Kong ◽  
Yun Shi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Recent studies have shown that gastric-derived Lactobacillus can inhibit the colonization of H. pylori and attenuate gastric inflammation in conventional animals, but the resistant of Lactobacillus to gastric environment is still unknown. Here, we aimed to screen the candidate Lactobacillus that could adapt to the harsh gastric environment and inhibit the colonization of H. pylori. Results In vitro, the growth rate of seven Lactobacillus strains in different pH and bile salt concentration were tested, the size of inhibition zone and adhesion rate of H. pylori when Lactobacillus exist were measured. In gnotobiotic mice models, we examined the amount of colonization of L. crispatus and H. pylori by qRT-PCR and evaluated the inflammation in the gastric tissue by the content of MPO and H&E stain. In vitro experiments showed L. crispatus had a better growth rate than other six Lactobacilluses in pH 2.5 to 4.5; under the 0.2% bile salt concentration, other bacteria did not grow except for L. crispatus; L. crispatus yielded 24.2 mm of mean inhibitory zone diameters; the adhesion rate of H. pylori only reached 41.3% in H. pylori-L. crispatus group(HLG). In vivo, the amount of colonization of H. pylori in HLG is fifteen times less than that in H. pylori group (HG) (p < 0.05); the MPO value of HG was 1.4 times that of HLG; the gastric tissue inflammation of HLG was obviously lighter than HG. L. crispatus may be an adjunctive therapy for treating H. pylori- associated disease in clinic. Conclusions L. crispatus has resistance to low acid and high bile salts environment and it inhibits the growth of H. pylori and the subsequent inflammation H. pylori caused in gnotobiotic Kunming mice model, which suggest the potential of developing L. crispatus as clinical agents.


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